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Publications

Publications by Luís Carlos Coelho

2023

Optical Fiber Surface Plasmon Resonance for Glucose Detection

Authors
Cunha, C; Silva, S; Coelho, LCC; Frazão, O; Novais, S;

Publication
EPJ Web of Conferences

Abstract
This work proposes a sensor that utilizes a transmission scheme for measuring glucose aqueous solutions based on surface plasmon resonance. A comparison between the performance of two sensors with similar lengths and different diameters is performed. The first sensor comprises a multimode optical fiber with a diameter of 400 µm and a 10 mm middle section of the cladding removed. The second sensor is similar, except that the fiber has a diameter of 600 µm. The sensors were evaluated for their performance in measuring glucose concentrations ranging from 0.0001 to 0.5000 g/mL. The 400 µm sensor demonstrated high sensitivity however, the sensor with a diameter of 600 µm attained a slightly higher maximum sensitivity of 322.0 nm/(g/mL).

2023

Optical fiber flowmeter based on graphene oxide coated michelson interferometer

Authors
Monteiro, CS; Ferreira, M; Mendes, JP; Coelho, LCC; Silva, SO; Frazao, O;

Publication
SENSORS AND ACTUATORS A-PHYSICAL

Abstract
Measuring gas and liquid flow rate is paramount in various scientific and industrial applications. This work presents an optical fiber flowmeter based on a graphene oxide (GO) coated Michelson interferometer. The interferometer is fabricated using a long-period fiber grating (LPFG) followed by a GO-coated single-mode fiber (SMF). By radiating the GO coating, it experiences photothermic effect that induces local heating of the film. This results in a variation in the effective refractive index in the cladding modes, which induces a phase shift on the interferometer spectrum. When a gas flow is introduced near the coated fiber, the hot-wire region will experience a reduction in temperature proportional to the flow rate. The flowmeter exhibited a linear wavelength shift to the flow rate with an absolute sensitivity of 17.4 +/- 0.8 pm/(L.min-1) for gas flow rates between 2 and 8 L/ min. Furthermore, the dynamic response of the sensor was studied, attaining a maximum response time of 1.1 +/- 0.4 s

2024

Impact of gaseous interferents on palladium expansion for hydrogen optical sensing: A time stability study

Authors
Almeida, MAS; Almeida, JMMMD; Coelho, LCC;

Publication
OPTICS AND LASER TECHNOLOGY

Abstract
Continuous monitoring of hydrogen (H2) concentration is critical for safer use, which can be done using optical sensors. Palladium (Pd) is the most commonly used transducer material for this monitoring. This material absorbs H2 leading to an isotropic expansion. This process is reversible but is affected by the interaction with interferents, and the lifetime of Pd thin films is a recurring issue. Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors are used to follow the strain induced by H2 on Pd thin films. In this work, it is studied the stability of Pd-coated FBGs, protected with a thin Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) layer, 10 years after their deposition to assess their viability to be used as H2 sensors for long periods of time. It was found that Pd coatings that were PTFE-protected after deposition had a longer lifetime than unprotected films, with the same sensitivities that they had immediately after their deposition, namely 23 and 10 pm/vol% for the sensors with 150 and 100 nm of Pd, respectively, and a saturation point around 2 kPa. Furthermore, the Pd expansion was analyzed in the presence of H2, nitrogen (N2), carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4) and water vapor (H2O), finding that H2O is the main interferent. Finally, an exhaustive test for 90 h is also done to analyze the long-term stability of Pd films in dry and humid environments, with only the protected sensor maintaining the long-term response. As a result, this study emphasizes the importance of using protective polymeric layers in Pd films to achieve the five-year lifetime required for a real H2 monitoring application.

2023

Optical Fiber Flowmeter Based on a Michelson Interferometer

Authors
Monteiro, CS; Ferreira, M; Mendes, JP; Coelho, LCC; Silva, S; Frazão, O;

Publication
EPJ Web of Conferences

Abstract
In this work, an optical fiber flowmeter based on a Michelson interferometer is presented. The Michelson interferometer uses a long period fiber grating (LPFG) to couple light to the cladding modes followed by a section of a GO-coated single mode fiber (SMF). By radiating the GO thin film, it will increase its temperature changing the effective refractive index of the optical cavity of the Michelson interferometer. By placing the sensor on a gas flow, its temperature surface will decrease in a proportional manner to the flow rate. The sensor was studied in both static and dynamic dry nitrogen flow, attaining an absolute sensitivity of 17.4 ± 0.8 pm/(L.min-1) and a maximum response time of 1.1 ± 0.4 s.

2024

Optical pH Sensor Based on a Long-Period Fiber Grating Coated with a Polymeric Layer-by-Layer Electrostatic Self-Assembled Nanofilm

Authors
Pereira, JM; Mendes, JP; Dias, B; de Almeida, JMMM; Coelho, LCC;

Publication
SENSORS

Abstract
An optical fiber pH sensor based on a long-period fiber grating (LPFG) is reported. Two oppositely charged polymers, polyethylenimine (PEI) and polyacrylic acid (PAA), were alternately deposited on the sensing structure through a layer-by-layer (LbL) electrostatic self-assembly technique. Since the polymers are pH sensitive, their refractive index (RI) varies when the pH of the solution changes due to swelling/deswelling phenomena. The fabricated multilayer coating retained a similar property, enabling its use in pH-sensing applications. The pH of the PAA dipping solution was tuned so that a coated LPFG achieved a pH sensitivity of (6.3 +/- 0.2) nm/pH in the 5.92-9.23 pH range. Only two bilayers of PEI/PAA were used as an overlay, which reduces the fabrication time and increases the reproducibility of the sensor, and its reversibility and repeatability were demonstrated by tracking the resonance band position throughout multiple cycles between different pH solutions. With simulation work and experimental results from a low-finesse Fabry-Perot (FP) cavity on a fiber tip, the coating properties were estimated. When saturated at low pH, it has a thickness of 200 nm and 1.53 +/- 0.01 RI, expanding up to 310 nm with a 1.35 +/- 0.01 RI at higher pH values, mostly due to the structural changes in the PAA.

2024

Observation of Surface Plasmon Polaritons and Bloch Surface Waves in a Metal-Dielectric Photonic Crystal

Authors
Dias, BS; de Almeida, JMMM; Coelho, LCC;

Publication
IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL

Abstract
The excitation of two different electromagnetic surface waves-surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) and Bloch surface waves (BSWs)-is demonstrated in a 1-D metal-dielectric photonic crystal with numerical and experimental studies. The discussed structure consists of an Ag-TiO2 thin-film stack forming a metal-insulator-metal-insulator device. The thickness of the TiO2 layer placed between the metals is tested for two different values (50 and 300 nm), which also allows the excitation of guided-mode resonances. It is observed that BSWs in this metal-dielectric structure behave similar to the case of all-dielectric photonic crystals, whereas the SPP modes display similar properties to those excited in metal-insulator-metal cavities. The sensitivity of these surface states to variations in the refractive index (RI) of the external dielectric is characterized. For the case of the plasmonic modes, a maximum sensitivity of (7.2 +/- 0.3) x 10(3) nm/RIU was measured, while for the BSW the maximum sensitivity was (1.20 +/- 0.05) x 10(2) nm/RIU. Due to the large field enhancement and penetration on external media, these surface states display exceptional properties for application in optical sensors, and the presented results provide interesting possibilities in the design of novel sensing structures with a flexible selection of surface states for interrogation.

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